December 6, 2019



St. Nicholas Day

At the beginning of the Advent season is St. Nicholas Day (December 6 or December 19 on the Julian calendar). St. Nicholas was a bishop who was known for his good deeds, especially for the needy and children. He often gave generously and anonymously. Nicholas was officially recognized as a saint in the 800s and in the 1200s Catholics in France began celebrating Bishop Nicholas Day on December 6. Many countries in Europe celebrate the Feast of Sinterklaas-also known as St. Nicholas-starting on the 5th of December, the eve of the day, by sharing candies, chocolate letters, small gifts, and riddles. Children put out their shoes with carrots and hay for the saint's horse the evening prior, hoping St. Nicholas will exchange them for small gifts. It was the Dutch pronunciation of his name-Sinter Klass-as well as Dutch traditions that made their way to America. These led the way to the name Santa Claus and the tradition of gift-giving. For many European countries, this simple gift-giving day in early Advent helps preserve a Christmas Day focus on the meaning of Christmas itself. Learn more and check out these titles



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In Memoriam-Robert K. Massie

Robert K. Massie, a Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer who wrote popular books on giants of Russian history, died on Monday at his home in Irvington, N.Y. He was 90. The cause was complications of Alzheimer's disease, said his wife, the literary agent Deborah Karl. Mr. Massie said his literary odyssey was set in motion by research he did at the New York Public Library during lunch breaks from his job as a young journalist. It was purely personal research at first: He wanted to know more about the bleeding disease of hemophilia and how he and his wife at the time, could help their hemophiliac son, Bob. During his research he became fascinated with perhaps the most famous childhood case of hemophilia, that of Alexei, a son of Nicholas and Alexandra. Mr. Massie wound up writing an article on hemophilia for The Saturday Evening Post, where he had taken a job in 1962. He wrote an accompanying article about Alexei and his parents, but The Post did not print it. Still, he found himself unable to abandon the family drama of the Romanovs, as the Russian dynasty was known, and he eventually quit his job to pursue the subject full time. A decade later, "Nicholas and Alexandra" was published to acclaim. Though nearly 1,000 pages long, it sold more than 4.5 million copies and is regarded as one of the most popular historical studies ever published. photo courtesy of Karsten Moran for The New York Times Check out his titles here.



Library Reads-Voter Favorites 2019

Library Reads harnesses the value of “library staff picks” into a single nation-wide discovery tool, a monthly list of ten newly released must reads. Check out the 2019 voter favorites



All the things that are wrong in the world seem conquered by a library's simple unspoken promise: Here I am, please tell me your story; here is my story, please listen.-Susan Orlean, The Library Book



        

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